Crossword-Solution: INTERJACENT 11 letters, 15 clues 🏆 scrabble score: 20

Dictionary

Word Word Type Definition
Interjacent a. Lying or being between or among; intervening; as,
interjacent isles.

We have 15 clues for the answer “INTERJACENT”

Clue Answers
intervening; situated between two things 1 answer
inboard 8 answers
Introvert 9 answers
inwrought 9 answers
inwardly 16 answers
Indoor __ 17 answers
Innermost 21 answers
inly 21 answers
ingrown 22 answers
intermediate 33 answers
inward 42 answers
Middle 44 answers
interior 47 answers
intrinsic 60 answers
In ___. 72 answers
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Kind of apple
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
ETEAR
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
14 +2

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Sentences with INTERJACENT (5)

His short visit of thirty days was employed in viewing the monuments of art and power which were scattered over the seven hills and the interjacent valleys.
The History of The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Edward Gibbon 1996
Robert was succeeded by his sons Roger and William, to whose dominion not only was Naples added, but all the places interjacent as far as Rome, and afterward Sicily, of which Roger became sovereign; but, upon William going to Constantinople, to marry the daughter of the emperor, his dominions were wrested from him by his brother Roger.
History Of Florence And Of The Affairs Of Italy Niccolo Machiavelli 2006
Faint vision is when by reason of the distance of the object or grossness of the interjacent medium few rays arrive from the object to the eye.
An Essay Towards a New Theory of Vision George Berkeley 2003
With reference to this opinion, not to repeat what hath been already said concerning distance, I shall only observe, FIRST, that if the prospect of interjacent objects be that which suggests the idea of farther distance, and this idea of farther distance be the cause that brings into the mind the idea of greater magnitude, it should hence follow that if one looked at the horizontal moon from behind a wall, it would appear no bigger than ordinary.
An Essay Towards a New Theory of Vision George Berkeley 2003
Now the change of one visual image for another involves in itself no absurdity, and becomes absurd only by its immediate juxta-position with the fast thought, which is rendered possible by the whole attention being successively absorbed to each singly, so as not to notice the interjacent notion, changed, which by its incongruity, with the first thought, I, constitutes the bull.
Biographia Literaria Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2004